Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Amazon workers are under pressure to up their AI usage—so they’re making up extraneous tasks
business

Amazon workers are under pressure to up their AI usage—so they’re making up extraneous tasks

Fast Company · May 13, 2026, 7:30 PM · Also reported by 1 other source

According to Amazon employees, the company is pushing them to incorporate more and more AI in their workflows. What exactly they should be using it for is less clear—leaving the door open for employees to waste AI resources on unnecessary tasks. As detailed in a new report by The Financial Times, Amazon employees are reportedly using the company’s new internal AI tool Mesh Claw to create extraneous AI agents, not to increase productivity, but to drive up AI activity. The employees say Amazon is tracking their consumption of AI tokens, incentivizing some of their colleagues to prioritize quantity over quality when it comes to the technology. Amazon employees sound off Several anonymous Amazon employees told The Financial Times that rising AI expectations are changing their workplace for the worse. “There is just so much pressure to use these tools,” one Amazon worker said. “Some people are just using MeshClaw to maximize their token usage.” Though Amazon apparently told employees that their AI usage stats wouldn’t come up in performance evaluations, not all workers are buying it. “Managers are looking at it,” another employee said. “When they track usage it creates perverse incentives and some people are very competitive about it.” The interviewed employees claim that the company has a target of 80% of developers using AI each week and that employees’ token consumption is tracked on an internal leaderboard. But a representative for Amazon says that there is no such company-wide metric for AI usage, nor are there internal leaderboards where employees are measured against each other. Rather, employees are able to view their own AI usage on personal dashboards. MeshClaw, the tool some Amazon employees are using to inflate their AI usage, takes inspiration from OpenClaw, another AI tool that’s infamous for its potential productivity—and for its potential risks. Unlike other AI models, OpenClaw and MeshClaw run locally on users’ own hardware, giving them unprecedented inde

Article preview — originally published by Fast Company. Full story at the source.
Read full story on Fast Company → More top stories

Also covered by

Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from Fast Company alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop